Request constituent help from your representatives in Congress

By Steve Peterson, Rural Winneshiek County

It seems as if the recent chaos in Washington DC has, inevitably, come home to roost in our community. And you and your neighbors will suffer the consequences – see “Federal funding freeze causes uncertainty for local nonprofits,” Decorah Leader, Thursday, Feb 6, 2025.

Dismantling Article 1 of the Constitution – the one that gives Congress the “power of the purse” and the one Elon Musk is flouting – while nullifying an entire section of the 14th Amendment can seem like fun and games. Until it isn’t anymore. Once broken, a Constitution is hard to put back together again.

None of this had to happen. It’s a power grab by a small number of ultra-wealthy people. There are plenty of good people – yourselves included – who can, and should, stand up to shout a loud no. Unfortunately, your elected federal representatives seem to meekly endorse the thievery and their growing irrelevance.

If you have a problem with a federal agency, my advice is to try to make your representatives work for you, not the rich and powerful.

File a request for constituent services if you are told the support you need is frozen, or no longer available. Constituent services are designed to help you navigate federal agencies that aren’t working like they are supposed to work.

Opening a case will require you to fill out a form, sign it and send it in. Follow-up with frequent phone calls requesting an update on your case. I’ve filed one myself! We’ll see what happens.

Constituent Services

U.S. Rep. Ashley Hinson, https://hinson.house.gov/services/help-federal-agency

U.S. Sen. Chuck Grasley: https://www.grassley.senate.gov/services/help-with-federal-agencies

U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst: https://www.ernst.senate.gov/assistance/casework

Incidentally, you have to actually sign a request for help because “the Privacy Act of 1974 requires that members of Congress or their staff have written authorization before they can obtain information about an individual’s case.

While you are at it, you might request that your federal representatives do some oversight. Ironically, what Elon Musk is doing – gathering your tax information, SSN, Medicare/Medicaid information, as well as contract information of competitors, etc. – is clearly a violation of the Privacy Act since you – and his competitors – probably didn’t sign a form telling him he could have it. So, you might point out that you don’t approve of Mr. Musk stealing your stuff to line his own well-stuffed pockets. Who knows what he’s doing with it? A man like that knows the market for such information.

Sincerely,

 

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